According to Boxofficemojo the production budget was $50mil, and it's Worldwide gross was nearly $33mil ($13.4 mil in the US and £19.3 mil everywhere else), so they were on minus $17mil after the theatrical run.

Factor in the theatre and distributors cut (which is higher for the foreign markets too) and that gross goes down a lot so they have to make a good bit more than $17mil with DVD's/Blu-Rays etc to get into the black on this one.

My best guess (and I stress this is a pure guess as I have no idea just how much money they keep from everything) is they will need to sell something like a minimum of 2 million units of DVD & Blu-Rays to reach that target.

Its ww take is 36+ million. BoxOffice mojo is slow to update and has been all along with this movie.

There have been different reports on what is the final budget but 45m is the one iv heard the most

I just saw this movie. I liked it. Of course the production desing was very cheap, which almost painfully sad to see. Those Lawgiver motorcycles were really ugly. If only the production desing of the Stallone movie could have been merged to this. I liked the rough uniforms of the judges though.
Performance-wise this was solid piece of cinema. Karl Urban made Judge Dredd really intriguing. Because he is a human, yet behaves almost like Robocop. So it was interesting to see what he does and how does he interract with others. Does he show any signs of humane behaviour and stuff like that? And you could feel his steely cold stare behind that black visor, it was cool!
The plot was fairly simple one, so it's sad that we might not get another, perhaps more complex Judge Dredd story in the future. This was after all a good re-introduction to the world of Mega City One.

I am absolutely and utterly terrible at math, so if we say that each copy of Dredd sold for, say, $10 each, and sold 650,000 copies, then how much is that? What guesstimate for profit are we looking at? $60-65 mil?

Dredd is selling for $18-20 DVD, and $20-25 BD. Profit margin is a lot higher.

Let's just say that it's $20 per movie X 650,000 and it's already at 13million.

Its ww take is 36+ million. BoxOffice mojo is slow to update and has been all along with this movie.

There have been different reports on what is the final budget but 45m is the one iv heard the most

Ok, best case scenario then is minus $9mil gross. Factor in all the costs and other cuts for other parties involved the net loss would be higher.

So for discussions sake I'd guess the net loss would be maybe around minus $15mil.

With DVD/Blu-Ray sales they maybe getting $10 to $13 per unit net, so we are looking at them pushing 1.5 to 2 million units to get into the black. It's had a great start in that market though so it's not an infeasible target.

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After overheads, retail mark-ups & tax etc, $10 per unit in their pocket is probably closer the mark (so they may be at around $6.5mil net atm)

That I understand.

Maybe Valaquen can clarify, but it seemed like he/she was talking about store price, and that's what I was going by. I wasn't getting into real numbers because even from the money it's made, we don't really know how much the studio actually made.

Performance-wise this was solid piece of cinema. Karl Urban made Judge Dredd really intriguing. Because he is a human, yet behaves almost like Robocop. So it was interesting to see what he does and how does he interract with others. Does he show any signs of humane behaviour and stuff like that? And you could feel his steely cold stare behind that black visor, it was cool!

Actually, the ironic thing is Robocop has more humane qualities than Judge Dredd.

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The plot was fairly simple one, so it's sad that we might not get another, perhaps more complex Judge Dredd story in the future. This was after all a good re-introduction to the world of Mega City One.[/

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These solid home video sales just might have the capacity to say otherwise. One can hope.

I just saw this movie. I liked it. Of course the production desing was very cheap, which almost painfully sad to see. Those Lawgiver motorcycles were really ugly. If only the production desing of the Stallone movie could have been merged to this. I liked the rough uniforms of the judges though.
Performance-wise this was solid piece of cinema. Karl Urban made Judge Dredd really intriguing. Because he is a human, yet behaves almost like Robocop. So it was interesting to see what he does and how does he interract with others. Does he show any signs of humane behaviour and stuff like that? And you could feel his steely cold stare behind that black visor, it was cool!
The plot was fairly simple one, so it's sad that we might not get another, perhaps more complex Judge Dredd story in the future. This was after all a good re-introduction to the world of Mega City One.

Dredd has had the occasional doubts, with his human nature coming into conflict with his 15 years of training and conditioning at the Academy (he showed empathy and compassion to one tragic citizen leading to him breaching regulations, which in turn had him being analysed by a shrink). They always wrote it well in that we never saw a dramatic (and uncharacteristic) change in his basic personality, it was handled with subtlety.

In the end though the law rules his mind and heart and he always got past the doubts, though they may be coming back to it soon as more recently his clone father Fargo whispered with his dying breath to Dredd that the Judges were never meant to take over permanently and they have killed America, and only Dredd and Rico (Fargo had been briefly brought out of suspended animation so he didn't know what happened to Rico) can fix it. Dredd dismissed it at the time but I figure they won't leave it at that.

They will also have to address his age sooner rather than too now: He is now in his 70's (unlike most other comic books they have aged him in real time relative to when the 2000AD began).

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I am actually aware of Dredd's history (even though I made the mistake of calling his bike The Lawgiver, when in fact it's The Lawmaster. Awesome). Watching the movie I was like is he going to show human emotions now? Which he of course really didn't. But even that grumpy cat mouth of his when he was attentive to Andersson's gunshot wound was really kind of him.

I read that story revolves around a fetish club where the fetish is Dredd. So it's obviously some club-goer dressed as Dredd. From the article on Comics Alliance:

A brutal act takes place, Taylor's father disappears and suddenly this kid is all alone in a world that seems to be firmly telling him to keep who he is hidden so no one gets hurt. Then he finds himself in a Dredd-themed underground gay club, where everyone dresses either as Dredd or as a perp, Dredd being the ultimate symbol of macho, leather-clad repression in this city. It's kind of a Village People deal turned up to 100 in a Mega-City One style. And then the real Dredd arrives.

Also, The Sun is a notorious piece of garbage and nothing you ever read from them should ever be taken without copious amounts of salt.

I figure that caption is from the man being kissed too, not whoever it is dressed up as Dredd (safe to assume that guy already knows his own deal).

Seriously, they have gone to pains to stress Dredd doesn't allow himself to feel romantic inclinations to anyone, of any gender, as Judges are not allowed to (they are supposed to be celibate and he spurned De Marco's advances for example). But both Fargo (his clone father) and Rico (his clone brother) were straight so we can assume Dredd is too. He just takes a lot of cold showers or spends a few minutes longer in the toilet than is customary

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I've preferred thinking of him as celibate (not the same thing). He can feel physical attraction to others, but simply denies himself any indulgence in that. Makes him that much more devoted to his beliefs that he forcibly denies himself such pleasures, rather than him not feeling capable of any of them in first place.

In an odd way this has reminded me of old story when the city was hit by an outbreak from a mutant super-flea, that caused itching so extreme citizens were literally killing themselves in desperate attempts to relieve the constant itching. A solution was figured out (the vile stench from some goo made in a factory repelled them) but at the end Dredd was asked how he never got the fleas as he was never seen scratching himself at all.

He replied that he'd had them all along as well, he just wasn't scratching.

That sums him up. Iron will preventing him from performing a reaction that is completely natural to anyone else.

And that's how I see his sexuality really. It has always been there (his father and brother both enjoyed affairs), but his iron will has always prevented him from indulging in it.

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